Rating: PG
Timeline: Post The Gift. S.6, wanders AU around
Bargaining.
Summary: Spike speaks with Buffy.
Disclaimer: I don’t
own ‘em; I’m just playing. Please oh please, do not sue me.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What he could not pay in blood, he more than made
up for in tears. There had been nothing else for the first week. The first long,
agonizing week that the world lived on without her. Spike died a thousand times
that week. With every sunrise, every sunset, every time he heard a heartbeat
that wasn’t hers. A heartbeat that existed because of what she had done. What
she had sacrificed.
The world mourned her, even if it didn’t know it.
And he died a little more every day. Until the skin he wore was foreign. Until
his ribcage poked through his cotton tees and his body began to wither away.
Willow checked on him often. And she brought Dawn. She would sit with
him when it was quiet—when his crypt wasn’t a haven for his screams—and talk
about Buffy. The Buffy that she knew and remembered. The Buffy that he’d
only known from afar. At first, Spike was convinced that it was all designed to
punish him, but he found, as more time passed, that Willow was helping in some
small way. She told him things that Buffy would never have shared, and she did
so because she knew that he’d loved her. And even though he didn’t believe it,
he couldn’t help but cry at the witch’s certainty that Buffy had loved him, as
well. A little. Just a little.
He felt he knew her more in death
than he ever had in life. It helped, and then it didn’t. It didn’t help loving
her more after she was gone. And he did; God, every day, he loved her more. He
touched her more after she was put in the ground. After the dress that Willow
and Tara had picked out was over her sacred body. After the funeral. After the
burial. After the woman he loved was plotted six feet beneath his
feet.
His heart was buried with her.
Buffy’s friends were being
surprisingly wonderful. Spike didn’t know how to handle kindness. Hatred was
expected. Malice and contempt were anticipated. He knew the blacker side of the
human psyche well. So well. For a hundred years, he’d dwelled as a thing who fed
off raw darkness. Kindness, though…Spike didn’t know how to react to kindness.
Buffy had kissed him after he’d endured torture from Glory. She’d trusted him
with Dawn when Dawn needed protecting. She’d come to him for help when fleeing
town. She’d looked at him in the eye and smiled and welcomed him back into her
house, and Spike hadn’t known how to react. Kindness. Kindness from the woman he
loved.
Kindness from Buffy was one thing. He treasured every genuine
smile she’d thrown his way. Every time she’d spoken to him like a friend. An
ally. A confidant. Someone that she could turn to when she needed help. Someone
she could trust. Though her kindness had nearly slain him with hope. Hope for
something that could never be.
It hadn’t been easy. In the beginning,
he’d changed for Buffy. Well, he’d tried to change for Buffy. He’d tried to
look like he was changing, and somehow, in that, he’d actually changed.
It had stopped being a ploy; it had become something real. Something tangible.
He’d changed. And near the end, Buffy had noticed.
And now she was
gone.
Spike’s eyes flooded with tears, his head hanging under a sheet of
sparkling stars. Stars that shone without her. Stars that lived when she did
not.
Stars lived; Buffy didn’t.
Buffy was in the ground and he
was above it. He was dead, but she was gone.
She was gone.
Spike
honestly didn’t know what brought him to her side every night. He supposed, in
some small way, that it was a poor man’s last attempt to know solace. She
remained gone, no matter how many times he saved her in his dreams. No matter
how often he pictured a new ending for the night the world was stolen from him.
He came to her side to speak with her in death as he wished he’d been
able to speak with her in life. He came to her side to pour out the soul he
didn’t have onto her sacred ground. He came to her side to love her, because
there would never be another for him.
She was gone, and he was dead. They
were truly made for each other.
“Hello, Buffy,” Spike said softly, a
long, raucous sigh trembling through his body, carrying a choked sob with it.
“We’ve gotta stop meeting like this.”
The words fell idle around her
tomb, as they always did. There was no witty retort, no snappy comeback. There
was only the whisper of the wind through the leaves. The cool, haunting whistle
through blades of grass as everything moved, even if all was still.
“I
don’t know why I keep coming here,” he continued, sliding his hands into his
duster’s pockets. He couldn’t draw his eyes away from the inscription on her
headstone. She saved the world a lot. It was so appropriate, but likewise
incredibly limiting. He understood why her friends had chosen it. The days
following Buffy’s sacrifice had left them all numb. They hadn’t wanted to
believe it; none of them. Spike had forced himself to be strong for Dawn, just
as he knew she’d been strong for him. Just as he knew she cried herself to sleep
at night, because that was what he did. Every night that knew no savior.
“Well, yes I do. I can’t go anywhere else. You know it as well as I do,
yeah? Got ole Spike caught by the shorthairs.” He smiled softly, but there was
no light behind it. He smiled as he would if she were standing before him. As if
she could actually see him, now. See the hollow ghost of a person that she’d
left behind. “Then again, you always bloody did.”
The wind replied with a
low howl. It was surprisingly chilly, for being late summer in southern
California. Not that Spike felt the cold any more than he felt heat. The wind
touched him, and he didn’t feel a thing. He honestly didn’t remember the last
time he’d felt anything.
Another long sigh rippled through his
body, and he forced himself to close the space between them. He neared and
dipped reverently to his knees, his left hand reaching for the engraving of her
grave marker as though magnetized. “I thought of something else,” he whispered,
his vision blurring. “Another way. I told you the last time…I can’t stop. Every
bloody time I close my eyes, I see it all again. How I…I know I shouldn’t chat
about your death all the time. Your mates…Willow, especially, she tells me I
should talk about other things. Did I mention that? They know. Red came across
me the other night. She heard me…I think she was coming to chat with you, too.”
Spike broke off at that and sniffed hard, wiping at his eyes with his
free hand. God, in all his years, he couldn’t ever remember crying so much. For
days now, it was the only function that made sense to him. He hated the times
that he remembered to eat; when Dawn scolded him and demanded to know when he’d
last visited the local butcher. In so many ways, he hated himself for making
that bloody promise to Buffy the night that he’d lost her. The promise to
protect her kid sis. The promise that kept him tied to the earth.
He
wanted so badly to wither away. To simply stop existing, as he’d so readily
stopped living. But he had to eat. He had to keep himself strong, because Dawn
was the only piece of Buffy that he had left. As long as there were baddies to
fight—as long as she lived, he’d exist. He’d be there to shadow her. He’d be
there to make sure that Buffy hadn’t jumped in vain.
He’d honor Buffy.
His promise to her meant everything. She’d trusted him when she’d asked it of
him. Buffy’s trust was golden, and he would never, ever violate it. Never.
Spike blinked and glanced down, then up again. “They’re bloody lost
without you, Summers. We all are. An’…I know. What makes it worse is I know it’s
us. It’s all us, right? I’ve seen enough ugly death to know when it…when it’s
just the people who are left behind, scrambling around an’ trying to make sense
of everything. Willow’s bloody terrified that you’re lost in a hell dimension.”
He shook his head soundly. “I know better. God, if they let you near Hell, your
light would purify everything, an’ all the evil uglies like yours truly would
just…vanish.” He paused and forced a raw, near-maniacal laugh. “Not that I would
mind vanishing. I want to be gone so badly. But that’s not what
you…it’s…”
He broke off, inhaling sharply. “It’s hard. God, I never
knew…do you have any idea how much easier this would’ve been if I could’ve jus’
killed you when I first saw you? All balls an’ bloody swagger back then. So
confident.” He shuddered. “I was so confident. An’ if I could’ve killed you
then, I wouldn’t…”
The thought, the mere suggestion, made his stomach
churn. God, was it possible that he’d ever been so naïve? That he’d ever lived a
second on this earth without knowing the gnawing pain of loving Buffy Summers?
He didn’t remember it. He didn’t remember the century before she was born
anymore than he remembered the years he’d spent trying to convince himself that
he wanted her exactly where she was now. He didn’t remember anything beyond
being consumed with her; beyond his insides being drenched with her purity.
Spike knew there was a time when he could have beaten her. Had
circumstances been different, he could have beaten her very easily. Before she
became damn near invincible. Before the only person who could kill her was
herself. He could have known life without his love for her burning a hole in his
chest. He could have, but he’d rather live with pain than remember what his life
had been like without her in it. And knowing that he could have beaten her—that
his hands could be stained with the blood of an angel—made him sick.
Even through his grief, he was a better man for having known her. And
the memories he had of her—the few good and the many bad—were precious in their
own right. Each had been a steppingstone to where they were the night she jumped
off the tower. How they’d come so far. Buffy had trusted him. Buffy had been
kind to him. And each trade between them had, in some small way, brought them to
that crossroad.
He’d never know where it could have gone. Never. But he
hoped.
And Willow said that Buffy had loved him. Just a
little.
Spike drew in another sharp, shuddering breath. “I miss you,” he
murmured, pressing his palm to the ground. If he tried, he could pretend he felt
the remnants of her warmth through the soil. But no. Her warmth was gone. She’d
taken that with her. “I thought it’d get easier, you know? I thought
eventually…eventually it won’t hurt to wake up.” He paused and laughed shortly.
“I know I’m pathetic, luv. I can jus’…but it’s every day. It’s getting through
every day. An’ I shouldn’t feel so bloody sorry for myself. It’s just missing
you, right? You’re…where you went…I know you’re…God, I hope so. I hope I haven’t
just convinced myself you’re warm an’ happy where you are, because Christ, Buffy
if you…you never had a bloody moment’s rest while you were here. Not
one.”
There was a quiet moment. He sniffed again and wiped his tears
away. Not that it did any good. No matter how hard he tried to rein himself in,
there were always more tears. “Is it wrong to…a part of me wants Red to be
right. A part of me wants her to tell me to…I want her to tell me you’re in Hell
so I can go in and get you out. So I can get you back. I could do it, see. I
could save you then. A part of me wants the witch to tell me that you’re
somewhere where you need to be saved, so I can get you back.” He ran his hand
over the ground, shivering at the feel of the grass between his fingers. “I want
you back so much. Even if you hate me—even if it meant…getting you back an’ it
being like it was before. You have any idea what it’s like here, luv? What it’s
like waking up without…without anything? Of course you do…I tell you
every night, right? I let you know…I tell you. I try to talk about something
else, but it just comes back to this. It comes back to how much I miss you. I
miss everything. God, I even miss those sodding punches you’d bruise my poor
nose with. Isn’t that funny?” He knew it wasn’t. “I should talk about something
else, shouldn’t I? It can’t be all about me. I’m not that interesting…an’ the
stuff that is interesting, I’d rather you never hear.”
Spike
sighed and settled on the ground, pressing his back to her headstone, his hand
resting peacefully over the earth where she was buried. And in a strange, pained
way, he felt closer to her than he ever had. He always did when he was speaking
to her. “The first time I saw you. There’s a good story, right? I bollixed that
up good, didn’t I? In my defense, I couldn’t have known. I saw you were light.
You were pure light. An’ I couldn’t have known that I would love you. That I
would love you as much as I do. I should have. I should’ve seen you an’ known
it. God knows Dru did. She knew it right off—she jus’ never said anything. Not
until we left. But she knew the second that I came home that I would love you.
An’ maybe I fell that night. Maybe I fell in love with you at first glance. I
should’ve known it. I should’ve looked at you an’ known, like Dru did. Maybe if
I’d done things differently from the start…maybe…”
He smiled fondly, his
fingers stroking the ground as he would stroke her skin. “You were marvelous. I
can’t get over how marvelous you were. I told you…last year in that alley, that
the second slayer I fought had a taste of your style. It’s true, yeah, but only
a taste. She was still business. But you weren’t. God, you weren’t. Not like
that, anyway. Not so…there’s no way to even put it. You were so full of life.
You were jus’ bursting with it. I knew you’d be a challenge, pet. Bloody
understatement, that. You never stopped challenging me. Even after I fell…it’s a
part of why I love you so much. You never backed down. Not once. You never
stopped the dance—you jus’ amended it. You’d dance with your chums then go dance
with whatever fledgling was…well, an’ then you’d dance with me. You danced your
best with me.”
Then again, he was biased. He saw her best when she was
fighting him. She was so gorgeous when she fought.
“I want to wake up,”
he whispered, the hard smile melting off his face, his eyes welling again with
tears. “I want it to go away. Why won’t it go away? Every second gets a little
worse. How is that?” A guttural sob tore at his throat. “The pain won’t end. I
keep waiting for it to end, an’ it won’t. If it hasn’t by now…do you think that
means it never will? I miss you. I miss you so much I can’t…why can’t I wake up?
God, Buffy…I…”
Another breath of wind brushed over his skin. Spike
shuddered and sighed, willing his eyes closed. He pictured her behind him.
Pictured her hands on him, massaging his shoulders through his leather coat. If
he concentrated, he could feel her fingers running through his hair. He could
hear her melodic voice whispering into his ear. He could hear her reassuring him
that everything would be all right. That she was with him as she’d never been
with him. That things would be all right now. That the world would mend itself.
That his heart would heal, and she’d be there to hold him when things got
dark.
He could picture it. God, he was saturated in her scent. She was
caressing him with her heaven-sent hands. Her silken skin was stroking his. He
could almost feel her lips. False memories, of course. Bits and pieces of
fantasy colliding with the few moments of intimacy they’d shared. Willow’s
spell. Buffy’s soft kiss against his bruised lips. The look in her eyes when she
told him that what he’d done was real. The softness she’d given him when he told
her that night that he knew that she’d never love him. True memories mixed with
fantasy. He’d never known her the way he wanted to. The way he did
now.
The way she held him as he sat at her gravesite.
“It won’t
end,” he whispered again, a note of resolution stinging his voice. “I won’t let
it. An’ that’s the bitch, isn’t it? It could end, but I won’t let it. I don’t
want to let go of you. I don’t want this to be…I can’t get through the day,
Buffy, but I can’t let go of you, either. I don’t want to. I can’t. I need you
too much. I…” He choked a sob and shook his head hard. “I don’t want to get over
you. I don’t want to forget…an’ I’m bloody terrified that I will. So I come here
an’ I talk to you…an’ it gets worse every day. An’ it could get better, but that
would mean getting…getting over losing you. An’ maybe I should, but I don’t want
to. I don’t want…”
He opened his eyes, but his vision was obstructed by a
wall of tears. And the illusion was lost. Buffy’s ghostlike touch vanished. The
whisper of her lips against his skin melted away. Her scent dissolved into
nothing. He was alone. He was alone, leaning against her headstone. There was
six feet of earth between them.
Buffy was gone, and he was
dead.
And he envied her so much that his useless lungs choked on even
more useless air. She was gone, and he had to be here. He had to exist when she
didn’t. He had to pretend to live when she was gone.
Every day was
getting a little bit worse.
He couldn’t let go. He couldn’t let her go.
In a hundred years, he’d never lost someone like this. Not like Buffy. He’d lost
her when she’d never even been his to lose.
He couldn’t let the world
forget that she had died to make sure it went on. And if he had to remember for
everyone, he would. There was nothing else for him.
Not with Buffy gone.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The summer knew many empty nights, even if
he never knew any quiet. He spent his time patrolling with the others to keep as
occupied as possible, for all the good it did. He lifted his chin when the
Scoobies asked him if he was all right. He glared at the Buffybot when her back
was turned to him, and turned his glare to Willow when the bloody machine’s
synthetic eyes darted in his direction.
He hated that he was the reason
that thing existed. That mockery of everything Buffy was and had ever
been. That thing that wore her face and spoke as Buffy had spoken. The thing
that appraised him with her Buffy-shaped eyes and complimented his body or his
sexual prowess with her Buffy-voice. He hated being with them—the
Scoobies—because it meant that he wasn’t where he wanted to be.
He
wasn’t with Buffy. The real Buffy. The Buffy that lived with him in the
cemetery.
He’d turned into a babysitter. A standby. He watched Dawn like
a hawk when the Scoobies wanted her watched. He wasn’t about to turn around and
let anything happen to her—not while he needlessly breathed air that should be
hers. Not while he breathed and Buffy didn’t.
However, his determination
to keep his promise notwithstanding, nothing could change the fact that Spike
wanted to spend his time with Buffy. He was never wholly there when he
was with her friends. His mind was always with her. What he’d say to her the
next time he saw her. He’d never known himself to prattle on and on for hours
before—it was something he’d associated with Dru. Talking when there was no one
there to listen. But when he was with her, there was no stopping him. He’d tell
her of a new way he could have saved her. He’d tell her how he could have
not failed her.
Spike would tell her other things, too. He told
her things he’d never shared with anyone. Never. Things he’d never repeated; not
even to himself. He told her about his mother. He told her about the time when
he was twelve and Gerald Connelly—some bloke that eventually met the business
end of a railroad spike—had stolen sheets of his poetry and distributed them to
his classmates. He told her how he’d worshipped Cecily from afar for so long,
and how hard it stung when she threw his affections in his face. How he’d
thought Drusilla was redemption personified. How much it hurt to love women who
mocked him; women who used his love to get their kicks, then shagged Angelus on
the floor right before his weeping eyes.
He told her that it hurt that
she loved Angel, but had never loved him. But he was grateful that she never
used him. He was so grateful for that. She never pretended. She never stroked
him and kissed him before running to someone else. No. Buffy had always given
him her honesty. Always. Even when it hurt, he could count on her to be exactly
who she was. She never played him.
He didn’t know what he wanted to tell
her tonight. Maybe talk about how her Watcher was going back to England. About
how Dawn was getting scrawnier by the day and he didn’t know how to handle it.
About how he’d dreamt of her the night before, and how he’d awoken drenched in
his own tears.
Then again, that was something he told her every night. It
didn’t make him feel better, and it certainly didn’t stop her from haunting him
in his sleep.
“Spike?”
He blinked wearily and sat up, then quickly
averted his eyes as Willow entered the Summers’ living room, an overly-perky
Buffybot trailing behind her.
“Good news. You’re off the hook tonight,”
Willow said with a smile. “Giles’s flight was delayed.”
Spike sighed, his
eyes glued to the coffee table. “So he’s watching the Bit
t’night?”
“Yeah.”
“Willow and I are going to the Magic Box,” the
Buffybot announced with that note of merriment that he loathed. “She is going to
buy supplies.”
“Imagine that,” he drawled, rolling his eyes and climbing
to his feet. “I’m off, then. Have a nice patrol.”
At that, Willow tensed
and forced a nod. He would have said something if he cared more. “Yeah,” she
said. “Patrol. We’re…we’re going to patrol.”
“I slay demons with pointy
weapons,” the Buffybot confirmed with an enthusiastic nod. “Spike, don’t you
want to help me wield the large weapons?”
He shuddered and ignored her.
“Try not to get killed,” he said, nodding at Willow as he marched toward the
front door, snagging his duster from the coat-rack.
Time to go visit
Buffy.
“I enjoy watching the taut muscles in your back as you move away,”
the Buffybot chirped helpfully. “It really accentuates your tight
posterior.”
Spike froze. “Willow,” he said softly. “If she doesn’t stop
doing that, I’m gonna rip her robot head off.”
“I-I’m trying. Really. Her
extra programming—”
“Just. Fix. It.”
“Y-yeah, okay. I’ll fix
it.”
There was a shuffle. “Spike? Did I do something wrong?”
The
question slammed him into a proverbial wall. Of course the bot hadn’t done
anything wrong. She’d been made for him, after all. She was the Buffy that he
could have. The Buffy that was supposed to be the better alternative. The Buffy
that was supposed to make not having Buffy something that he could bear.
The bot haunted him. He supposed it was what he deserved. She was there
with Buffy’s perfect likeness because he’d put her there. And now he couldn’t
look at her.
No. The stupid bot hadn’t done anything wrong. She just
wasn’t Buffy.
Spike trembled and sighed again, sliding his duster on
without turning around. “You know where to find me, if you need anything,” he
said shortly.
He was out the door before Willow could reply.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Everything changed when he went to visit
Buffy that night.
He’d wanted to go right after he left her house. He
wanted to wash out her false image. He wanted to rant about his own
stupidity—about what a bloody fool he’d been to ever think that he could
manufacture something to take her place. That a robot with her face and body
could ever fill the void. Could ever have substituted for what he couldn’t
have.
That was what he would talk about tonight.
Only he didn’t
get there as soon as he’d wanted to. He stopped by the butcher’s to pick up his
blood first. Then he went home, fixed himself a drink, and had passed out in his
rocker after a having a good cry. He was always exhausted after
crying.
He was always exhausted.
It was late when he left the
crypt again, but there would be no night that he left Buffy by herself. Not one.
And while he might be a sorry excuse for whom she would want at her side, he
would make sure that she wasn’t alone.
He never wanted her to be
alone.
“Sorry I’m late, sweetheart,” he murmured by way of habit as he
approached the headstone, his steps heavy with burden and defeat. “I
just…”
He stopped cold when he saw it. The world stopped.
“Oh
God.”
The wind whistled. The earth groaned. The leaves around his feet
rustled and danced. And something was wrong. Something he knew well. Something
he’d seen a thousand times. Clumps of grass and soil had been unearthed, and he
knew why. Something had risen. He knew this. He knew this, but he couldn’t
believe it. There was no way. It wasn’t possible. It wasn’t possible.
The ground was disturbed. Buffy’s ground was disturbed.
It wasn’t
possible, but it was true.
Buffy was gone.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the hundred and forty-seven days that
Buffy had been gone, Spike hadn’t thought it possible for his life to get worse.
For the sorrow encasing his chest to grow wider. For the hole in his heart to
burrow any deeper. For the proverbial chord around his throat to tighten. Never,
in all his years, had he thought it feasible for vampires to asphyxiate, and
he’d been wrong. He’d been wrong about so many things.
Having Buffy back
was a dream realized; only somehow, it had turned into a nightmare. Because she
wasn’t with him—she wasn’t with any of them. She was a ghost, a shadow, a mirage
of the person that she once was. Her life was gone. Her brilliance. Her smile.
She was deader to him now than she’d been all summer. She simply
existed. She wandered. She spoke when spoken to. She would attempt half-smiles
when she noticed that her melancholy was especially evident. There were nights
that he found himself stalking her on patrols, just to make sure that she walked
away from the few vamps she encountered unharmed. Buffy handled herself well;
she always did. But there was no joy to her at all. She was robotic. She moved
entirely on autopilot. And he didn’t know how to help her.
He didn’t know
if she even wanted help.
He’d avoided her at first, which was hard
because he couldn’t stay away from her. He’d found her grave unearthed and he’d
rushed to her house, only to find her with Dawn and a bewildered Giles. Buffy.
His Buffy. She’d been all in white when he saw her. Dawn was doctoring her
bruised, broken skin. Her hands were marred with red. She’d clawed her way
through her coffin. Because of Willow. Because of Willow and the Scoobies and
their bloody magicks that had brought her back.
Buffy had looked up when
he burst through the door. Her eyes had found his, and he touched the stars. He
couldn’t stop staring at her. Buffy. His Buffy. Back to life. Looking at him
with the eyes that haunted him every night. And for a second—for a blink—he
imagined he saw something there. Something warm. Something precious.
She’d whispered his name. She’d breathed his name. His name, on
her lips, knew more life in that blink than he’d known all summer. And then,
just as quickly, it had vanished.
Spike’s unsuccessful campaign to avoid
her had started almost subconsciously. When he awoke, he’d think of her, and his
gut would twist and ache. It seemed every fabric of his being was drawn to
her—contorted with the desire to protect and comfort her, even when she refused
the help he offered.
She’d told him about Heaven once, and there was
nothing for him to say. Nothing to do. He couldn’t offer her a hug or his
shoulder—he couldn’t pat her back and tell her that everything would be all
right, because it wouldn’t. Her friends had torn her from paradise. And he was
the only one who knew. She’d entrusted that knowledge to him, and he found it
terrifying.
It wasn’t fair to expect her to live when she’d already died.
But she was in pain. She was in so much pain, and he didn’t know how to help
her.
He was the only one that knew why.
But he couldn’t talk to
her. He never knew what to say. God, what was there to say? And while his
insides were bursting with ecstasy at the knowledge that she lived—that Buffy
was alive again—it was harder now than it had ever been before.
She
wasn’t the girl that had jumped. She didn’t give him anything. Not the tentative
kindness that had fueled his hopes before the apocalypse, and not even the cold
repulsion that he had come to know as well as the taste of blood. His nose had
not once been damaged by an angry slayer fist since she came back. She gave him
nothing. Not kindness, not hatred. She treated him like an extra in a
play.
Then again, that was how she treated everyone.
And in the
midst of everything—adjusting to life with Buffy very much a part of it once
more—Spike couldn’t bring himself to end his nightly ritual. He needed to be
with her. He needed to be with Buffy. He went to her gravesite every
night and wept, spilling confessions into hallow ground and begging her to give
him guidance. How to help her. How to make things better. How to be a friend,
even if she didn’t want him at her side.
Spike knew she didn’t love him,
but on the same level, he felt a kinship with Buffy that went deeper than love.
He’d spoken with her every night, and she’d held him when he cried. Perhaps it
was all in his head—perhaps he’d fabricated a dream-world in which she
understood him. In which she saw how much not helping her was killing him. But
he felt he knew her better than anyone in the world, because he was the only one
that had been with her at all while she was gone. He’d been with her every night
just to keep her from being alone.
He couldn’t talk with the real Buffy
now. He didn’t know how. It wasn’t fair to push all of his issues onto her
fragile shoulders. She was dealing with something that no one could even begin
to comprehend. To thrust his why-won’t-you-hit-me-like-you-used-to
problems onto her, like anything was her fault, would make him more a monster
than he’d ever been in the hundred years before knowing her.
But he
needed to talk with her. He needed to do something. Forced separation was
killing him. He had to remind himself constantly that, even if she had awoken in
a state where he felt comfortable in approaching her, he’d never had any rights
on her at all. She didn’t love him. Buffy didn’t love him. The Buffy that he
loved, that he cried to, couldn’t stand the sight of him. She didn’t care. She
barely tolerated him. She was kind, yes, because that was the sort of person she
was. But she didn’t love him.
However, as long as he could, he would sit
beside her in the falsified warmth of her phantom arms and talk. There was
solace in that. Simplicity at its best.
Tonight, in that regard, was no
different. He approached her grave the way he always did. His hands shoved
awkwardly in his pockets, his eyes filled with reverence and sorrow. He read her
epitaph again. And again. And again.
She wasn’t there, of course. Buffy
wasn’t six feet beneath him anymore. She was breathing air and eating food and
drinking water and going through the motions of being alive.
She’d
seemed more alive to him when she was dead.
The air around her grave was
still saturated in her scent. It had been for days now. Spike sighed and bowed
his head. “Hello, sweetheart,” he whispered. “I keep telling you that we’ve got
to stop meeting like this.”
The wind whistled. Leaves rustled and danced.
“Right.” He shrugged helplessly and settled on the ground beside the
gravestone. The ground knew him well by now. “That line has gotten a li’l stale,
hasn’t it? Guess…I never know what to say, luv. How to start. It’s funny, I
guess, ‘cause I usually end up blabbing my bloody head off. Just never know how
to start.”
He glanced down, his eyes fluttering shut, and the pain in his
chest intensified.
“I saw you today,” he said softly, his fingers
grazing the grass above her empty grave. “Not long ago, point of fact. I was…I
was going by your place. See if you needed anything. I’ve been trying to keep
away…but I can’t. Not when you’re there an’ you’re…you’re not talking to anyone.
I can’t touch you. You weren’t too keen on my touching you before…but now. God,
I don’t know what to do. I don’t know…”
Another long sigh tore at his
throat. His legs itched to pace, but he forced himself to remain stationary. He
didn’t want to leave what, in his mind, was her side. The place where she knew
peace. “What they did to you…I don’t…I know they hurt you, pet. I know it. They
love you an’ they hurt you. They took you away from…from a place that I can’t
even…they took you away from that.” He clenched his fists, exhaling slowly. The
thought of what she’d been through always unmade him. “An’ you…I look at you
now, an’ you’re just there. You’re just…you’re just there.”
Spike paused.
“You’re there,” he repeated reverentially. “Do you have any idea how much I…it
was like I woke up, when I saw you again. I walked through those doors an’ you
were there, an’ my nightmare was over. It had never happened. None of it. I
never had to see you dead. I never had…all of this was in my head. You were
there. I saw you an’ my nightmare was over. An’ yours was just starting, wasn’t
it? I look at you an’ I don’t see you at all. I can’t see you at all, Buffy.
You’re just…there. An’ it sodding kills me.”
He winced the second that
the words left his lips. He hated the way that sounded. How selfish he could be,
demanding that she get over her pain so that he could get over his.
It
didn’t change what he wanted, though. Her pain was his pain. And every
time he was near her, he felt it in spades. How much she was suffering. How
every second that she was with them on Earth was another second too long of her
reevaluated sentence in Hell. “I want to know how to help you,” he whispered. “I
want to know how to make it better for you. An’ I know I can’t. I know it. I
can’t just give you Heaven back. I can’t…but you’re not alive, Buffy. God, I
look at you, an’ you’re jus’…you’re gone. An’ I can’t stand seeing you so dead
when you…I want to try. I know I can’t do much, but I want to try. An’ I have no
way of…how do I even tell you that? How do I even…”
He broke off again,
trembling. He had a handful of soil, now. A handful of the earth where Buffy had
rested for a hundred and forty-seven nights. A handful of the earth where her
ghost had clawed her way to freedom. “I want to try,” he whispered. “But I don’t
know how. It’s not like I have any…you’re hurting so much, and I can’t help you.
You don’t talk to me. You don’t talk to anyone. An’ when you do talk to
me, you jus’…you’re only half there. An’ I can’t stand it.” Another quivering
sigh tore through his lips. “I wish you’d give me something. Anything. You don’t
even…you don’t even seem angry with what they did to you. You don’t care.
If I thought that beating me senseless would bring you to life, I’d go do
something to earn it.”
The wind answered him, as it always did. He caught
a low howl as it collided with branches and ricocheted off cold mausoleum walls.
Just the wind. The wind that carried her scent. She was everywhere; she was
always everywhere. She wandered the cemetery at night. She likely came to see
her own resting place. He didn’t blame her. Wasn’t often someone got to stand on
their own grave. Not like this. And the thought left him completely unraveled.
“I’m so sorry. God, I’m so sorry. I’m sorry that I can’t be sorry for
what they did. They brought you back. They brought you back an’ you’re here, but
you’re not…an’ I’m sorry. I’m sorry that I can’t wish you dead to make you
happy. I love you too much to wish you dead. I love you too much to…I look at
you, an’ it kills me. An’ I want to help so bloody badly. I want to help. And I
can’t. I can’t.” He shook his head. “I can never help you. I tried saving you
an’ I…I’ve saved you every night…but not when it counted. Not when you needed
me. An’ when I could’ve saved you again, I didn’t. I could’ve…”
Spike
wanted to believe that he would have stopped it. He really did. But he knew
better. Had there been the slightest chance that he could have her back, he
would have wanted it. Any chance that he could see Buffy again—that the gaping
hole in his chest would mend—and he would have wanted it. A shudder raced down
his spine and he shook. “You were lying in sunshine,” he whispered, his eyes
fogging with tears. “I couldn’t touch you. You were lying in sunshine. All in
white. You jumped because you had to. Because I wasn’t quick enough. Wasn’t
clever enough. An’ when I wanted to hold you, you were lying in
sunshine.
“I don’t really remember what happened after that. I think
Willow…I think she an’ Glenda brought me home. I don’t remember. All I know is,
you were in sunshine one second an’ I couldn’t touch you. An’ when I looked up
again, the light was gone an’ I was alone.” He sniffed ineloquently and wiped at
his face, bits of dirt falling through the cracks between his fingers. “I wanted
to dust. I thought about it…about how to do it. How to kill myself. An’ somehow
I didn’t. I’d like to think it was because I was strong enough to go on, but I’d
made you a promise. I wasn’t going to fail you. Not again. I’d already failed
you once an’…I wasn’t gonna do it again. An’ then Red came by an’ asked me to
help her with the arrangements. She said it was gonna be a night funeral…so I
could be there. So Angel an’ I could be there. She let me pick out your shoes,
an’ I put one of my rings on your finger.” A sharp, high-pitched titter rang
through his throat. “I wanted to be there. I wanted to climb down there with you
an’ just…but I couldn’t. I’d made you a promise.”
He paused. “An’ then I
saved you every night. But not where it counted, right? An’ not even when I
could have again. I’ve been here so many times, Buffy. I’ve sat here with you
an’ now you’re back. An’ I didn’t get a chance to save you. You’re back an’…I
can’t handle it. I can’t.” Spike inhaled sharply and shook his head. “You’re not
in sunshine anymore, but I still can’t touch you. I look at you an’…I hate them
for what they did. I hate them an’ I love them, an’ I can’t touch you because
you…I don’t know how to help you, Buffy. I wanna help you so much. An’ I try to
reach out but I can’t because I didn’t save you. I can’t talk to you. You’re
not…I want to make you alive again. They brought you back an’ I want to bring
you to life. But I can’t. You’re a ghost. You’re a sodding ghost. I touch you
an’ you feel nothing. I touch you an’ I feel cold. I can’t give you
Heaven. I can’t even save you.” He shook hard, a harsh sob choking through his
lips. “God, tell me, Buffy. Tell me how to save you. Tell me what to do. Tell me
how to…I don’t know how… I love you too much to just sit here an’ do nothing,
but…God, just tell me what to do. Tell me how to make the hurt stop.
Please.” He shook his head and shuddered, the whole of him dissolving
into tears. “Please tell me how to save you.”
And then he couldn’t speak
anymore. His body was tense and drawn with the harshness of his grief. He knew
the taste of his tears well by now. So well. He knew how hard his body shook
when he couldn’t sustain the weight of his sorrow. He knew his lungs would fight
for air that he didn’t need. He panted and choked and sobbed, tried to get a
handle on himself before breaking again completely. He was sprawled out of her
grave, his cheek pressed to the ground, and he listened to the sound of his own
cries as the wind tried to calm him.
He felt her fingers on him, again,
as he had a thousand different times over the summer. He felt her skin against
his. He felt her arms. He heard her voice. He was surrounded in her completely,
and it was only getting worse. And that was the way things had been ever since
she’d returned from the dead. He imagined her pulling him into her arms, coaxing
his head to her shoulder as she soothed him. As she told him that it was okay.
That everything, somehow, would be okay.
He wanted to believe her so
badly. The whisper of a girl that no longer existed. He wanted to believe that
she was right.
But she wasn’t real. She was never real. And when he
opened his eyes, the chimera would be gone. The Buffy he loved would be
gone.
Only it felt so real; he could believe the fantasy a little while
longer. Just a little while.
“It’s okay,” she whispered, brushing her
lips against his brow. “It’s okay.”
Spike shivered and rubbed his cheek
against her, his sobs subsiding as his body calmed. “Buffy…” he whispered. God,
she felt so real. Too real. It was possible that he’d finally lost what little
sanity he’d had left. She felt too real to be a figment. And yet, he knew that
she would vanish as she always did. The dream got a little more tangible with
every passing night, but that knowledge did little to cushion the fall. He’d
open his eyes, and he’d be alone. That was the way it was. The way it had always
been.
“Spike…” She ran her fingers through his hair. “Spike. Open your
eyes.”
He shook his head.
“Please open your eyes?”
Another
quivering breath raced through his body.
No, it wasn’t possible. It
wasn’t possible. But he felt her. He felt her beneath his fingers. Her
warmth. Her purity. God, he could even feel her heartbeat. Her heart was beating
against him, and she was weaving her fingers through his hair, her lips
caressing his skin softly.
It’s an illusion.
“Spike.” Her
hands were on his face now, pulling back ever-so-slightly. And then she kissed
him. It was brief, but heartfelt. It was, quite simply, the sweetest kiss he’d
ever known. She tasted like sunshine and warmth. She tasted the way he
remembered her. The girl that had lived all summer in his heart. She tasted like
Buffy. “Spike, please. Please look at me.”
It wasn’t possible. When he
looked, she’d be gone. She always was.
But he couldn’t stay here forever.
He couldn’t live for want of pretend. Spike sighed his defeat and opened his
eyes.
And dissolved into tears again when Buffy graced him with a
smile.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There were times when she thought she’d
imagined it. For the first few days after Willow had raised her, she’d begun to
wonder if she was fabricating memories for want of belonging. But no—she
remembered the talks well. Too well to have imagined them. She remembered them
the way she remembered Heaven. She remembered warmth and compassion. She
remembered unlocking things that she’d never thought to touch. She remembered
clarity.
Death provided clarity. The idea struck her as laughably cliché
at times, and when she’d lay awake at night, waiting for sleep to find her, she
pondered how much knowledge she’d gained in Heaven. She’d told Spike once that
she’d been warm and safe and loved…and finished. And while that was true, it was
only the tip of the iceberg. She’d been so much more than that.
Enlightenment was the ultimate state of Nirvana, and for one hundred and
forty-seven days, she’d lived there. She’d watched the world fall time and time
again perilously close to plummeting over the edge of another apocalypse. She’d
watched her friends grieve and cling to one another—like a movie with the mute
button permanently in place. She couldn’t hear them, and while she wanted to
comfort them, she’d known it would be all right. That all would eventually be
all right. Death inspired grief; it was human nature. And eventually, they would
come to terms with their grief and move on. It was the way things were. She
wanted to tell them that she was okay, but she couldn’t. Instead, she watched
and waited for them to move on, never hearing a word.
Not unless they
spoke to her. Buffy couldn’t hear a thing unless they spoke to her. And Spike
had spoken to her every night. He’d gone to see her every night, and she’d
digested every word.
It was tragically humorous, the way the universe
lined up. It took dying to see him as she had—as she did. It took being away
from him to get to know him at all. And he told her about himself. He babbled to
her endlessly, whether or not he was standing at her gravesite. When he awoke,
he’d talk to her. When he was hungry, he’d talk to her. He’d talk to her in his
head when he was with her friends. He’d talk to her while watching Dawn. He’d
talk to her while dodging the Buffybot’s endless inquiries. Spike never stopped
talking to her.
There was no want of prejudice where she’d lived. No
anger, no resentment, no definitive lines of right and wrong. She’d seen Spike
for the first time after dying, and since he talked with her every night, she’d
grown to know him more and more. He wouldn’t let the world forget her, even if
it killed him to remember. Her memory, to him, was something precious. Something
that pained him. Something he treasured.
The wealth of his love was too
much at times, especially when it tagged his grief.
And then, in a
blink, everything had ended. Buffy had awoken in a coffin, torn from warmth and
enlightenment. Of love and understanding. She no longer had Spike’s voice
whispering in her ear. She’d been torn from light and placed into cold earth;
into a body that no longer knew how to live. And since then, life itself had
been on autopilot.
Heaven, in many ways, was turning into a dream.
Something she knew that she’d experienced, but was having more and more trouble
remembering. At first, there had been nothing but a blank wall. All she’d known
was that she had been warm and now was freezing. Her nerves were raw. Her skin
was numb. There was a void carved in her chest. She felt nothing, because she’d
lost everything.
She remembered her first night back. Remembered feeling
like a stranger in her house. Remembered Dawn’s room-by-room tour. Remembered
Giles’s befuddled cleaning of his glasses and his unwillingness to stop hugging
her for the first half-hour. And as Dawn was cleaning her hands—hands that she’d
used to claw through her coffin—Spike had burst into the room.
The look
in his eyes…if she lived another thousand years, Buffy would never forget the
look in his eyes. He’d swallowed her with all the warmth of what she’d lost.
He’d looked at her, and for an instant, she felt she was exactly where she
belonged. That nothing had been forfeit at all.
But it was only a shady
memory. She didn’t know why she felt so drawn to him; she just did. She couldn’t
remember. She couldn’t remember. Only that he was there and she felt she
needed him, and that thought—new to her recently reborn earthbound psyche—had
been as confusing as it was disturbing. There were certain things that Buffy
knew about her life. Spike was a good ally, and he loved her. But he wasn’t
Heaven.
Buffy couldn’t remember that he’d been in Heaven with her. She
just couldn’t.
However, her uncertainty over her feelings for him had led
to several revelations. He was the only one who knew. She felt confident in
telling him her secrets; she didn’t know why. And the more she told him, the
more she wanted to tell. The more she wanted to tell, the more scared of herself
she became. And with every second that passed—every second that she spent cold
and numb—she lost more of what she remembered. She lost more of her
afterlife.
The worst was being aware that it was happening. The worst was
the recognition that she was losing herself. She felt the wisdom she’d gained in
death had been lost the second that she fell back to Earth. And while her nights
were haunted with dreams—with snippets—she always awoke less a sentient being
and more a shallow mockery of human existence.
Spike started avoiding
her then, and she didn’t know why it cut like it did. Not until tonight. Not
until she’d seen him at her gravesite.
Not until the locked door finally
flew open, and she remembered everything.
Everything.
And
suddenly, everything made sense. The world made sense. And while the ache was
still very much present, while her skin was still numb and her insides still
frozen, there was something now that she’d feared she’d lost. Something that
could, in time, thaw her internal winter.
A spark. A spark of warmth. A
spark of something beyond the sisterly love she felt for Dawn and the begrudging
affection she had for her friends. The knowledge that, in their eyes, they’d
done right by her. Those emotions were standard. They came with her, because
she’d died with them. She’d died loving her sister and her friends. She’d died
with that.
But loving Spike? That was something that dying had
given her. Something she’d brought back. Something that her human memory
had tried to reconcile with the experiences of a non-human entity. She’d loved
him wholly in Heaven.
And now, holding him, she remembered
everything.
Spike was dazed when his sobs finally subsided. He held onto
her, and from the look in his eyes, she knew that he wasn’t entirely convinced
that she wasn’t a figment. A tribute to wishful thinking. And even though he had
his arm around her waist, even though he kept murmuring her name to verify her
tangibility, there was nothing she could do or say to truly prove to him that
she was real.
It wasn’t until they were at his crypt that he finally said
something other than her name. His fingers laced through hers, a note of panic
hitting his voice, he tugged her to him and murmured, “Are you
leaving?”
Buffy drew in a shuddering breath and shook her head. “No,” she
whispered softly, smiling. “I’m not going anywhere.”
And she didn’t. She
didn’t go anywhere. She led Spike to the downstairs of his crypt of her own
accord. She ushered him to bed, climbing in beside him.
She wrapped her
arms around him, holding his head to her breast, the rest of her giving over to
the first note of solace she’d known since awaking. She ran her fingers through
his hair, because she knew he liked that. And she waited. She waited for him to
speak.
There was nothing for a long while. Nothing but his arms around
her. Nothing but the feel of silent weeping as his tears resurged and dampened
her blouse. She didn’t try to stop him. She knew sometimes it was better to
cry.
Sometimes.
Right as he was falling asleep, Spike’s arms
tightened around her. The trembles wracking through his body absolutely unmade
her. He was a tower of strength, and he’d been broken all summer. Broken because
of her. Broken because he’d sent himself with her, only God hadn’t allowed him
inside. And now he was with her, trembling.
But it was different.
Everything was different. She remembered him. She remembered that she loved him.
And it was time to heal.
“Please be real,” Spike whispered.
“Please.”
Buffy brushed her lips across his brow. “I’m real.”
Her
reassurance seemed to calm him, and she followed him into sleep.
The next
morning, she awoke to find Spike staring at her, his tired eyes rimmed with red
and filled with fear and wonder. “Buffy?” he whispered, reaching up to touch her
face. “Am I dreaming?”
The hoarse disbelief in his voice filled her eyes
with tears. “No,” she whispered. “You’re not dreaming.”
And then she
lifted her chin and caught his lips in the sweetest kiss she’d ever known. It
was a rebirth, in many ways. Kissing him like this, in a body that was
experiencing life all over again. She whimpered when he whimpered. She tasted
tears, but she didn’t know whose. She explored his mouth and cupped his face.
She kissed him like the world was ending, only it wasn’t.
For Buffy, it
was only beginning.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
That night, they stood at her gravesite,
hand-in-hand.
“It’s time to say goodbye,” Buffy murmured. “I’m…I’m no
good at this sort of thing. I never was.”
“It’s not goodbye,” Spike
replied, squeezing her hand and coaxing her eyes to his with little more than a
gasp. The awe that blanketed her gave her such warmth. Such hope. He didn’t know
how much he gave her simply in a look. “You’re right here.”
Buffy blinked
rapidly and smiled. They would pay their debt in tears. She doubted he would
ever stop making her cry. And it didn’t bother her. The tears that Spike
inspired were of release and joy, not pain and sorrow. Those tears were
precious. She’d never gotten to cry them before, and now, she’d relish every
second. “You know I love you, right?”
The look on his face would remain
with her forever.
“I love you,” she said again, turning her eyes to the
headstone before her vision blurred completely.
The girl that had jumped
from the tower was no longer there.
The girl that had jumped from the
tower had gone to Heaven and grown up. And she stood now with the man who loved
her, holding his hand and sharing his tears.
Her eyes fell to her
epitaph and she shivered.
Beloved sister. Devoted friend.
Buffy released Spike’s hand, wrapping her arm around his waist.
“I love you, too,” he whispered, kissing her temple. “I love you so
much, Buffy.”
She saved the world a lot.
She saved the
world. She’d earned Heaven and the world had given her Hell. And Spike had saved
her. Spike had saved her from Hell. Spike had rescued her from her
self-constructed inferno. And if she lived a thousand years, there would be no
way to ever repay him.
“Goodbye,” Buffy whispered, staring at the
headstone and shivering hard.
Goodbye to the girl who jumped.
A long sigh rippled through her. She turned to Spike, wiping her
eyes. “Take me home?” she asked softly.
He nodded and kissed her, and
the world melted away.
The girl who jumped was gone, and in her place
was the woman who lived. The woman who lived and the man that loved her.
Side-by-side, hand-in-hand. Gaining back Heaven with every step. With Spike at
her side.
He chased the cold away and gave her warmth. With Spike, she
would remember how to live.
And in that, there was no greater
peace.
The End
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